And a few days later came the release of a video of folk-rock legend Neil Young recording a cover of Bert Jansch's "Needle Of Death" in White's refurbished 1947 recording booth.

The phone booth-sized Voice-o-Graph machine records directly to vinyl, and Young recorded his entire album "A Letter Home" on it.

"Young recorded the collection of covers on our refurbished 1947 recording booth at our Nashville headquarters," White's Third Man Records announced. "Imagine a very simple recording studio not much larger than a phone booth and you’ll get the idea. He describes the album as 'an unheard collection of rediscovered songs from the past recorded on ancient electro-mechanical technology captures and unleashes the essence of something that could have been gone forever.'"